Venice in September 2026: the Historical Regatta on the Grand Canal, the Film Festival closing, the crowd falling, the prices dropping, and authentic Venice
September is the month when Venice starts being itself again, the crowd falls progressively with the return to school, prices begin to drop, and on the first Sunday of the month the Historical Regatta is held on the Grand Canal, the most spectacular event of the Venetian calendar. Whoever can choose the month should choose September.
The Historical Regatta is held every year on the first Sunday of September (in 2026: 6 September) on the Grand Canal. It is the reenactment of the Venetian rowing tradition with: the Corteo Storico (the parade of 150 historic boats with figures in 16th-century costumes, including the reproduction of the Bucintoro, the Doge's ship); the rowing races on gondolini (the racing gondolas, narrower and faster). The best spots to see the Regatta: the Rialto Bridge (arrive at 8:30 for a front-row place); Ca' Rezzonico (the most spectacular bend of the Grand Canal); the windows of the hotels on the Grand Canal (book months ahead for the rooms with a view). The tickets for the official grandstands: €20 to €30, purchase at veneziaunica.it from July.
| Period | Temperatures | Crowds | Hotel prices |
|---|---|---|---|
| September 1 to 10 | 20 to 28°C | High (still summer) | €200 to €320 for a 3-star |
| September 11 to 20 | 18 to 25°C | Medium (school started) | €170 to €260 |
| September 21 to 30 | 16 to 23°C | Low to medium | €140 to €220 |
The four options to see the Historical Regatta of Venice: (1) A free spot at the Rialto Bridge, arrive at 8:00 for a front-row place on the bridge; the view is excellent but the crowd is enormous; (2) The official grandstands (€20 to €30, bought at veneziaunica.it), seats with a good view; (3) A boat on the Grand Canal with a local operator (€80 to €150, GetYourGuide "Regata Storica boat"), the view from the boat with the parade passing a few meters away is extraordinary; (4) A hotel room with a view of the Grand Canal, the most comfortable but it requires booking 4 to 6 months ahead and very high prices (€300 to €600 for the night of the Regatta). My recommendation: the Rialto Bridge arriving at 8:00 is the best combination of zero cost and view quality.
The first half (1 to 15 September) has the Historical Regatta (first Sunday) and the end of the Film Festival at the Lido (first week), unique events but also prices still high and a significant crowd. The second half (16 to 30 September) has prices down 25 to 35% compared with August, the crowd reduced to manageable levels even at San Marco, the weather still summery (18 to 23°C) but with cool mornings ideal for walks. My verdict: if you want the Historical Regatta, the first Sunday of the month, high prices, it is worth the cost. If you want quiet Venice with good weather, the third and fourth weeks of September, the best moment of the Venetian autumn.
Trenitalia (trenitalia.com) and Italo NTV (italotreno.it) cover the major high-speed routes. The Super Economy and Low Cost fares start at €9.90 to €19 for routes like Rome to Florence or Milan to Venice but sell out weeks ahead on peak dates. Last minute the same route can cost €65 to €90. For regional trains the tickets (€3 to €12) do not require booking but the paper ticket must be validated in the yellow machines before boarding. The digital ticket is not validated. Third-party resale sites add margins of 30 to 100% without adding value, always buy from the official site.
Official Italian taxis are always white with a lit sign. Fixed airport-to-center fares: Rome Fiumicino €50; Milan Malpensa €95 to €110. For urban routes the meter starts at €3 to €4 (daytime base). The Itaxi and Free Now apps book official taxis in the big cities with transparent fares. Uber works in Italy only as Uber Black (NCC) at prices often higher than a taxi. Avoid the unauthorized private cars outside the airports: you recognize them because they approach you proactively. Official taxis wait at the designated stands.
The Limited Traffic Zones use OCR cameras that read the plates. If you enter a ZTL without authorization a fine (€65 to €150) arrives plus the rental agency commission (€25 to €50) charged to the card 2 to 4 months later. The most dangerous ZTLs: Rome Centro Storico (active Mon to Fri 6:30 to 18:00 and Sat 14:00 to 18:00); Florence (7:30 to 20:00); Bologna (7:00 to 20:00); Naples varies by zone. Practical rule: never enter the historic center of the big Italian cities with a rental car. Use the park-and-ride lots and public transport for the center.
Since 2022 there is a legal obligation to accept electronic payments for any amount in Italy. In practice cash is still needed for street markets, offerings in churches, and some rural trattorias. The ATMs of the main Italian banks (Intesa Sanpaolo, UniCredit) do not charge their own fees. Avoid the independent Euronet and Cardpoint ATMs that charge €3 to €5 commission. Revolut, Wise, and N26 offer conversions at the interbank rate with no fees up to certain monthly limits. Always keep €50 to €100 in cash for small expenses.
TheFork (thefork.it) offers discounts of 20 to 50% on verified restaurants. For Michelin-starred restaurants book 4 to 8 weeks ahead. For neighborhood trattorias walk-in works by arriving at 12:00 to 12:30 or 19:45 to 20:00. The signs of the authentic restaurant: a menu in Italian before English, a blackboard with the day's dishes, local customers seated at the tables, the owner present in the dining room. The signs of the tourist trap: a menu with photos of the dishes in 6 languages, a waiter who calls you in from outside the door, a location immediately next to the main monument.
The Vatican Museums in high season have queues of 90 to 150 minutes without booking. Solutions: (1) online booking at museivaticani.va (€20 plus €4) with a reserved lane; (2) a guided tour from GetYourGuide (€35 to €60); (3) opening at 8:00 on weekdays in November to February; (4) Thursday evening in summer (special opening until 22:00). The Vatican Museums are NOT free on the first Sunday of the month, only on the last Sunday (with queues of 2 to 3 hours). The Italian state sites (the Colosseum, the Uffizi) are free on the first Sunday, not the Vatican ones.
Italian residents do not go out in the central hours (12:00 to 17:00) of July and August. The strategies: visit the open-air sites only in the early morning (9:00 to 11:30) or the late afternoon (17:30 to closing); the Italian churches are the best natural air conditioning, always open, always cool, often magnificent; an artisan gelato every 90 minutes lowers your body temperature; 100% linen or cotton clothes, never synthetics; always fill your bottle at the nasoni of Rome or the public fountains, the mains water is drinkable throughout Italy.
The coperto (€1.50 to €3 per person) is legally allowed and covers the bread and the place at the table, it is not a tip. Do not pay it if it is not on the menu. The tip is completely voluntary: rounding up by €2 to €5 on a €40 to €60 bill is welcome but not required. To pay say "Il conto, per favore": do not make hand signals. Splitting the bill alla romana (evenly) is perfectly normal in Italy, there is no embarrassment in asking for it.
(1) Booking the hotel far from the center to save money, you lose hours in transport every day; (2) Going to the Colosseum without booking in high season, a line of 45 to 90 minutes; (3) Taking illegal taxis outside the airports, double the price; (4) Not validating the paper regional train ticket, a €50 fine; (5) Changing money at the airport, margins of 5 to 15%; (6) Trusting restaurants with menus in 8 languages near the monuments; (7) Drinking cappuccino at 14:00 is not a crime, but it is unusual for Italians; (8) Not bringing an adapter for the Italian type L sockets; (9) Bringing wheeled suitcases over the cobbles of Rome and the bridges of Venice, use backpacks or trolleys with reinforced wheels; (10) Planning a first day full of museums without considering jet lag.
Italian pharmacies (recognizable by the lit green cross) are open 8:30 to 13:00 and 15:30 to 19:30 with a break. The farmacia di turno (shown by a sign in the window of every closed pharmacy) is open 24/7. Without a prescription (OTC): painkillers (paracetamol, ibuprofen), antihistamines, antiseptics, plasters, gastrointestinal products, sunscreens. With a required prescription: antibiotics, anxiolytics, cardiology drugs. Foreign medicines: always bring the INN (international nonproprietary name) of the active ingredient of the medicine you usually take, the brand name changes from country to country but the molecule is the same. The Italian pharmacist can often suggest the Italian equivalent without needing medical appointments for minor medicines.
Always order the house wine (vino della casa or vino sfuso) as a first test, in quality trattorias the house wine is an honest local wine at €4 to €8 for half a liter that often surprises. If it is good, the restaurant knows what it is doing. The denominations: DOC and DOCG guarantee that the wine is produced in the indicated area with the declared grape varieties, they do not guarantee it is excellent but they guarantee authenticity of origin. When in doubt always choose the wine of the region you are in: Vermentino di Sardegna in Sardinia, Greco di Tufo in Campania, Primitivo in Puglia, Chianti in Tuscany. The local wines drunk in their own territory are almost always the best and cheapest choice.
High Speed (Frecciarossa, Frecciargento, Frecciabianca of Trenitalia; Italo of NTV) connects the big cities at 250 to 300 km/h, Rome to Milan in 2h55, Rome to Florence in 1h25, Florence to Venice in 2h10. It requires a mandatory booking. The regional trains (R, RE) stop at all stations, do not require booking, cost €3 to €12 for short routes, you must validate the paper ticket. The Intercity (IC) and Intercity Notte (ICN) are a middle ground: they serve the mid-sized cities not connected to High Speed, require booking, cost less than High Speed. For the tourist: always use High Speed for the main routes (comfort, speed, punctuality higher than the regionals); use the regionals for day trips to the nearby cities (Orvieto, Tivoli, San Miniato).
Italian emergency numbers: 112 (the single European number, answers everything); 118 (medical emergency and ambulance); 113 (Polizia di Stato); 115 (Fire brigade); 116117 (Guardia Medica out of hours, at night and on weekends). For theft with a report: the Carabinieri (112) or the local police Questura, the report is needed for insurance reimbursements. In case of passport theft: contact your country's consulate immediately in the city you are in. The recommended insurance for Italy: SafetyWing (excellent for extended stays), World Nomads, Allianz Travel. Do not rely on the European EHIC card alone, it covers only emergencies in public hospitals, not outpatient care.
Rome (ATAC): metro lines A and B, urban buses, trams; BIT ticket €1.50 valid 100 minutes; day pass €7. Milan (ATM): metro M1 to M5, historic trams, buses; ticket €2 valid 90 minutes; Day Pass €7.60. Florence (ATAF): buses and trams only (T1, T2); ticket €1.70 valid 90 minutes; no metro. Venice (ACTV): vaporetti; single ticket €9.50 valid 75 minutes; Day Pass €7.50. Naples (ANM): metro lines 1 and 6, funiculars, buses; ticket €1.60 valid 100 minutes. The ticket is always bought before boarding, at the station machines, in the tobacconists, or on the transport company's app.
The traps to avoid and where to buy well: (1) Leather in Florence: real Florentine artisan leather starts at €80 to €100 for a wallet. Buy at the Scuola del Cuoio of Santa Croce or in the workshops of Via Maggio, not at the stalls of Via dei Calzaiuoli; (2) Murano glass: buy only with the Vetro Artistico Murano mark of the Consorzio Promovetro, avoid the shops of central Venice that sell Chinese glass passed off as Murano; (3) Ceramics: look for the ceramist's name handwritten on the base of the piece; (4) DOP products: real Parmigiano Reggiano has the brand fire-stamped on the rind; DOP extra-virgin oil has the yellow-and-red European symbol on the label; (5) Wine: buy at a specialized enoteca or directly at the winery, the wines in the souvenir shops of the tourist center have markups of 50 to 100%.
Summer (June to August): 100% linen or cotton clothes (never synthetics, the Italian humidity does not forgive fabrics that do not breathe); comfortable shoes with a sturdy sole for the cobbles; a light scarf for the churches (covered shoulders required); SPF50 sunscreen and sunglasses; a 750 ml steel water bottle. Autumn (September to November): layers: t-shirt plus sweater plus waterproof jacket; boots or waterproof shoes for the rains. Winter (December to March): a medium-heavy coat; boots or waterproof shoes (the damp cold of Florence and Venice); a compact umbrella. In every season: an adapter for the Italian type L sockets; a power bank for your phone; a copy of your passport in digital format on the cloud. Do not bring: towels (the hotels provide them); an iron (the hotels provide them); big beach bags (impractical in the art cities).
The strategies that work: (1) Book 4 to 6 weeks ahead for high season, prices rise exponentially as the date approaches; (2) Choose family-run B&Bs instead of chain hotels, often cheaper, cleaner, with breakfast included and the owner who knows the city; (3) Sleep outside the immediate tourist center: in Rome in the Prati area instead of San Marco; in Florence in the Oltrarno instead of Piazza della Repubblica; in Venice in Cannaregio instead of San Marco. The saving: €30 to €60/night for the same quality; (4) Booking.com and Airbnb often have the same prices, always compare both for the same property; (5) Free cancellation up to 24 to 48h before lets you book ahead with no risk, change or cancel freely if you find better deals.
The three options in 2026: (1) A pre-activated international eSIM (Airalo, Holafly), the most convenient solution for those with an iPhone XS or Android 2020+. Buy online before you leave, it activates in 5 minutes. Airalo Italy prices: 10GB at €9.50; 20GB at €17; unlimited at €25 for 30 days. (2) A local Italian SIM (Iliad, WindTre, Tim), cheaper for long stays. Iliad €9.99/month with unlimited data, requires an ID document to buy. (3) Your operator's roaming, check whether your plan includes free EU roaming (European operators by EU law do not charge roaming within the EU; US and post-Brexit UK operators do). The WiFi of Italian hotels: almost all hotels of any category have WiFi in the room; the speed varies from 10 to 100 Mbps depending on the property and the location.
Summer (June to August): 100% linen or cotton clothes, never synthetics; comfortable shoes with a sturdy sole for the cobbles; a light scarf for the churches; SPF50 sunscreen; a bottle for the nasoni. Autumn and spring (April to May, September to October): layers, t-shirt, sweater, waterproof jacket; comfortable waterproof shoes. Winter (November to March): a heavy coat; boots or waterproof shoes; a compact umbrella (not the big one, in narrow spaces it is awkward). Always: an adapter for the Italian type L sockets; a power bank; a photocopy of your passport on the cloud; a universal adapter if you come from the UK or USA.
Italian pharmacies (a lit green cross) are open 8:30 to 13:00 and 15:30 to 19:30 with an afternoon break. The farmacia di turno (shown by a sign in the window) is open 24/7. Without a prescription: painkillers (paracetamol, ibuprofen), antihistamines, antiseptics, plasters, gastrointestinal products, sunscreens. With a required prescription: antibiotics, anxiolytics, cardiology drugs. Always bring the INN (international nonproprietary name) of the active ingredient of the medicine you usually take, the brand name changes from country to country but the molecule is the same. The Italian pharmacist is often able to suggest the Italian equivalent without the need for medical appointments for minor medicines.
How to visit responsibly: (1) Spread time and money outside the most saturated centers, Murano instead of central Venice; Praiano instead of Positano; Agrigento instead of Taormina; (2) Sleep in local properties (family-run B&Bs, agriturismi) instead of the platforms that extract value from the destination; (3) Eat at the local markets and in the neighborhood trattorias; (4) Do not collect sand, shells, or stones on the Italian beaches, it is forbidden and fined up to €3,000 in Sardinia and Sicily; (5) Do not fly drones without ENAC authorization, the regulation is strict; (6) Visit in low season if you can, it is an act of responsible tourism and it gives you a better Italy.
(1) Book only the sites that REQUIRE booking (the Colosseum, the Vatican, the Uffizi, the Accademia in Florence, the Galleria Borghese in Rome, Palazzo Ducale in Venice), for everything else walk-in works fine; (2) Do not plan more than 2 main sites per day, Italy is enjoyed in the alleys between one museum and the next; (3) Bring already worn shoes, not new ones, the cobbles of Rome destroy new shoes in a day; (4) Use Google Maps offline downloaded before you leave, the signal in the medieval alleys is intermittent; (5) Book the high-speed trains 2 to 3 weeks ahead for the best prices; (6) Never eat at the first restaurant you find near a monument; (7) Learn 5 words of Italian: buongiorno, grazie, prego, per favore, il conto, they open every door; (8) Leave one afternoon completely free to get lost, the best Italian memories come when you are not looking for anything specific.